Category Archives: design

Corner Garden Creation

During a recent extended family fishing trip, Mom and Dad L chatted with me about wanting to revive bits of their backyard landscape. Being globetrotters and full-time grandparents, these two had handed over the management of the area to nature. Now they wanted to introduce a bit more order and color, but still provide pollinators and birds with food.

The Site

The little, sunny area they had their eye on sits at the southeast edge of their urban, corner lot. Viewers would see the flower bed from the sidewalk, the backyard, and from within the house at the kitchen window. That section of the backyard had been overrun by bull thistle (Cirsium vulgare) for several years, so the plants had built up quite the dense colony. The soil was also heavily compacted, so it was tilled and a lot of compost was worked into the bed to begin restoring structure to the soil. Good soil structure allows water to drain down through the soil and gives plants the ability to stretch out those roots without hinderance.

The Plants

When making suggestions for the new bed, I wanted to make sure the plants:

  1. were magnets for birds, bees, and butterflies
  2. were tough and didn’t require much maintenance beyond their first year
  3. were colorful through different parts of the season
  4. were sizes from very tall (seen from the house) to shorter (seen from the edges of the bed)

Final Plant Selection for a Sunny Bed

Here is the final roundup to begin with for this bed, in the order of bloom time. The blooming period of the plants overlap each other so there is always more than one plant in bloom at once. Some of these plants were volunteers from The Lot (it’s a great way to thin out overcrowded beds in your own garden) and some were already in Mom and Dad L.’s backyard.

  • Existing Random Tulips
  • 3 Bee Balm (Monarda)
  • 2 Butterfly Weed (Asclepias tuberosa)
  • 3 Asiatic Lilies
  • 3 Hybrid Tea Roses
  • 5 Daylilies
  • 2 Russian Sage (Perovskia atriplicifolia)
  • 5 Purple Coneflowers (Echinacea purpurea)
  • 3 Black-eyed Susan (Rudbeckia hirta)
  • 3 Sedum

The Placement

Stepping stones and plants were placed in the bed. We didn’t plant right away to allow for an adequate amount of shuffling, changing our minds, and reorganizing yet again. The stones allow Mom and Dad L. a way to access the plants without stepping directly onto the bed and compacting the soil again. Here is the preliminary layout for the flower bed as it is view directly from the backyard.

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Here is the same bed viewed from the sidewalk at the edge of the property. The roses were placed at the edges of the bed and not next to the path where a gardener would get scratched up. The coneflowers at the back will provide a tall backdrop for the bed.082315-layoutfence

And here is the bed once again, this time viewed across the backyard from the kitchen window. That same backdrop of purple coneflowers will create a large enough stand to be admired from this angle as well.

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Finally we planted and watered the plants into the bed.

Planted Sunny Flower Bed

Finishing Touches

To help keep moisture in the soil for the new plants and block sunlight from the thistles more than likely beneath surface, we mulched the bed. Cypress mulch was applied 3 inches thick throughout, even under the stepping stones. Here is the finished bed from the backyard.

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And here it is from the sidewalk. 082315-layoutmulchedfence

It was really, really, REALLY hard for me not to place the plants closer together. However, I had learned it is better to allow the plants room to grow toward each other over the years rather than on top of each other during the second season.

Hopefully our winter is kind to the garden and all these transplants make it through to spring. In our Zone 6, if we plant by the end of summer, fall allows an adequate amount of time for the plants to settle in before the snow flies. I’m excited to see this bed next spring.

Local Open Garden 1.1

This season, the Master Gardener Association for our area reinstated “Open Garden” visits. Members can spend an evening together while touring a peer’s garden. Carol DeVries’s garden was the first in a series of visits scheduled throughout the summer and contained a lower garden at the roadside, a small veggie patch, and both sun and shade perennial beds. The property is situated in a very rural area about a 20 minute drive from our city.

When approaching the drive, we were immediately greeted by a cast of colorful lilies.

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Some other perennials were mixed in as well. I like these daisies against the blue of the evergreen.

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These lovely, hybrid coneflowers are Echinacea ‘Cleopatra.’ They were glowing with the early evening sunlight.

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This plant is Stachys officinalis ‘Pink Cotton Candy.’ Whenever I see blooms atop thin stems in a dense planting, it seems to me the flowers are floating.

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Here is a snapshot walking up the driveway from the lower garden to the home. Off to the left is an extensive shade garden while straight ahead are the full sun perennials.

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A gravel path curved through the left area of the shade garden while stepping stones bridged the space between the drive and walking path. The main mix of plants throughout this shade bed was a variety of ferns, hosta, and astilbe.

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This Geranium ‘Sambor’ had uber cool foliage.

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This is an overall shot of the full sun bed off to the right of the top of the driveway. The hollyhocks were a nice touch to give the bed some height.

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The color was fantastic. Look at the contrast of those yellow blooms and dark stems. I love how the fine texture of the grass in the background ties in with the fine-leaf foliage of the purple Liatris in front as well.

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Here is a closer shot of the blood red, reach-for-the-sky hollyhock. I had given up growing hollyhock on the Lot because of weevils and rust. However, after seeing these I may give it another try next year.

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Here is another cuddly conifer, this one being a Pinus mugo ‘Mops.’

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The garden then blended back into a shade environment as we passed behind the house.

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I took a lot of “photo notes” on how the different garden beds were edged. We have still to decide how to edge the beds on the Lot. This garden had a great combination of edging techniques, exemplifying all edging materials do not need to exactly match.

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Here is a shot of a Heucheralla ‘Solar Eclipse.’ Variegation, silver, and chartreuse foliage all popped in the shade garden.

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The blue glass here are upturned and buried wine bottles. Many jokes were made about volunteering to help the gardener empty more bottles if the need should ever arise.

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I really like this idea of a stepping stone path through a garden bed instead of an edged path. This technique was used several times throughout this garden. I think I’ll utilize it for the backyard garden on the Lot.

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Here these stones are not only decorative, but offer a solid, raise edge for the mower wheel when the lawn is cut. Since it was designed this way, there is no need to go around raised edging and trim with the weed whacker.

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Here is a macro shot of the garden bed with those stepping stones from above.

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This little corner was nestled beside and in a shady nook of the house.

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And then I saw this fern. Oh my goodness it was cool. The fronds looked like they had tassels.

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Here’s a closer shot. How cool is that?! I am kicking myself now because I did not get the name of the fern from the gardener.

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Coming around the out of the shade was this small, sunny bed right in front of the house. Here there were more lilies in bloom and a little veggie patch.

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Aren’t these Alium seed heads like little pieces of sculpture? I like the little tier of stones in the backdrop as well.

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That dark foliage and these colors? *swoons*

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Like its sister bed across the drive, this sunny perennial bed was also a riot of bright colors.

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I’m loving the idea of these Open Garden visits. There are so many great, inspirational ideas and the resident gardener is on hand to ask questions. Two more to go this summer!